A School on a Ley Line

After writing an article about my research in the ley line system in the Dundee Courier Craigie Column, an individual from Bankfoot in Perthshire followed the story up by repeating a tale told many times by his mother. 

  She was walking along Preston Road and was amazed to see her mother walking towards her. Even more amazed when she walked past without acknowledging her presence. She was flabbergasted when she turned round and called to her to find that the figure had vanished into thin air! 

   A few days later her sister arrived by bus (no phone in these days) to tell her that their mother had died at the same time she saw the apparition.

   I knew from my interest in energy leys what had happened — this figure was an apparition which was using the energy along the road. I realized that this would be a good time to prove my theory that many old roads were actually “spirit paths” and this one should, like so many others, be aligned to a church with its burial ground, so I was thrilled when I used Google Earth to discover that when I projected  the road to the east it bifurcated a burial ground just 75 meters away and ran along the corner stone and south wall of an ancient church. Projecting the line from the path at 45 degrees to the church goes to Stanley and Redgorton church 4.7 kilometres distant. I have a page on that subject here.

   The town of Crieff has every straight street and path aligned to an ancient site of some sort, very often burial grounds even dating back to Neolithic times, so it is not unreasonable to theorize that they are all intended for the use of spirits (see here for information on this subject).

   Poltergeists “German, noisy spirits” often get their energies from children, especially at the time of puberty, so it is very likely that school children walking to and from school would build very powerful energy leys for the use of spiri

apparition on a ley line

Above: Preston road along which the apparition was seen is aligned to the nearby church and burial ground.

I had a look at some of my old illustrations of the town of Crieff and found that the local Catholic church was an excellent example. 

  You can see in the illustration below that school children walking down from Broich road past the Neolithic/Bronze Age cairn (more recently used as a justiciary Court) and standing stone and along School Wynd (see here for page) would put their energy into that part of the road (incidentaly the road on which cattle thieves of old would be taken to the gallow tree. See here for more information).

  Not only that, but in line with my other theory that all the roofs of the churches in this area are aligned to other churches and burial grounds, the main roof ridge of this school is aligned to a very old circle of graves in the nearby cemetery. See here for page.

Crieff catulic church with aligned streets

Above: roads (in red) along which school children would walk, and catholic school (in yellow) aligned with a circle of very old graves.

St. Michael's church aligned to circle of graves

St. Michael’s church with its main roof ridge aligned to the same circle of grtaves in the local cemetery also aligned to a standing stone and a 4-stone circle. 

Water fountain behind triptych

Above:  The circle of old graves with a water fountain in the centre (spraying water emits lots of healthy negative ions which may be carried down a ley line) can be seen through the columns of this Masonic triptych (top Photoshopped on as it was demolished many years ago for safety reasons).